STRUCTURAL DESIGN FOR ARCHITECTURE

(Ben Green) #1
conforming to 'form-active'^7 shapes. Many, for

example, are based on the parabola, which is

the 'form-active' shape for uniformly distrib-

uted gravitational load. They are also shapes

which can be easily described mathematically,

and this makes both their design and their

construction much simpler than those of

equivalent irregular forms such as the chapel

at Ronchamp or the Vitra Design Museum. The

design is simpler because the analysis of the

structure, in which internal forces and stresses

are calculated, is straightforward if the form

can be described mathematically by equations

based on a Cartesian co-ordinate system. The

construction is straightforward when the form

can be described mathematically because this

greatly eases the problem of setting out and

building the formwork on which the concrete is

cast. Thus, the buildings which have been

designed by the architect/engineers fall into

the category of 'true structural high tech' (see

Section 2.2). They perform well when judged by

purely technical criteria concerned with struc-

tural efficiency and 'buildability' in present day

industrialised societies because their shapes

are both 'form-active' and part of the world of

precise mathematical description rather than

of personal preference.

To sum up, the buildings which have been

described above serve to illustrate both the

contribution which reinforced concrete has

made to the development of twentieth-century

architecture and the range of architectural

7 See Appendix 1. forms made possible by the material.^115

Reinforced concrete structures

Fig. 4.19 Plan of the Museum of Decorative Arts,
Frankfurt on Main, Germany, 1979-85. Richard Meier,
architect. Features such as the 3.5° skew which is present
in this plan are readily accommodated by an in situ
reinforced concrete structure. Note that regular column
grids are used where possible as this gives rise to the most
economical forms of construction.
Free download pdf